The Niagara Falls Review

New Zealand fans go to work in mourning World Cup defeat

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WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND — An all-night vigil by New Zealand fans ended in bitter disappoint­ment when they saw their team beaten by England after an unpreceden­ted Super Over in the final of the Cricket World Cup.

Sunday’s final began at 10 p.m. New Zealand time and ended, dramatical­ly, about 6:30 a.m. Monday when many dejected fans had to drag themselves away from their TVs and head wearily to work.

Some of those fans will spend the day trying to work out how New Zealand lost. It scored 241-8 and bowled out England for 241. In almost any one-day internatio­nal that would be a New Zealand win.

But under World Cup final rules, the tied match went to a Super Over in which the best batsmen of one side try to score the most runs against a nominated bowler from the other.

Both teams scored 15 runs in that over but England won on a countback of boundaries scored during the match.

It was the cruelest way for New Zealand’s giant-killing run through the tournament to end. When it came to the last of the 50 overs, and England still needing 15 runs with only two wickets left, fans dared to dream of a New Zealand win.

But New Zealand-born allrounder Ben Stokes guided England to a tie, hitting a six, then taking another six runs in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces when the ball accidental­ly ricocheted from his bat for four overthrows after running for two.

Some supporters immediatel­y vented anger at the rules which allowed a team which had been bowled out to bat again. One forlorn fan asked how a team could be beaten by zero runs. Former New Zealand all-rounder Scott Styris was unhappy with the sport’s governing body and tweeted “nice work @ICC ... you are a joke!!!”

Others took the defeat with more resignatio­n.

Actor Sam Neill, an ardent cricket fan, posted “great ambassador­s. Couldn’t be more proud. Gracious in the narrowest of defeats.”

The All Blacks rugby team, who have won their last two World Cup finals, tweeted “thanks for the ride you have taken us on over the past six weeks, @BLACKCAPS. You have done New Zealand proud and can hold your heads high.”

New Zealand’s sports minister Grant Robertson, who watched the match at Lord’s, told Radio New Zealand: “I think that was probably the greatest game of one-day cricket ever played and for New Zealand to be part of it is something really special.”

“Obviously, it didn’t end the way we would all have wanted but I’m incredibly proud of the way the team played,” Robertson said.

“They were so gutsy and they play cricket the way it should be played.”

Robertson added: “They are loved by other fans all around the world because of the way they play the game.”

England match-winner Stokes was born in the New Zealand city of Christchur­ch where his parents Gerard and Deb Stokes still live.

Gerard Stokes, who played rugby league for New Zealand, told Radio New Zealand he was proud of his son’s performanc­e but also sad for New Zealand.

“I’m sad for every supporter of cricket in New Zealand but I don’t think anyone could be too disappoint­ed with that game,” he said.

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